zfs-localpv
CouchDB
zfs-localpv | CouchDB | |
---|---|---|
12 | 28 | |
376 | 6,047 | |
5.9% | 1.0% | |
7.6 | 9.5 | |
2 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Go | Erlang | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
zfs-localpv
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ZFS 2.2.0 (RC): Block Cloning merged
I use it in Kubernetes via https://github.com/openebs/zfs-localpv
The PersistentVolume API is a nice way to divvy up a shared resource across different teams, and using ZFS for that gives us the snapshotting, deduplication, and compression for free. For our workloads, it benchmarked faster than XFS so it was a no-brainer.
- openebs/zfs-localpv: CSI Driver for dynamic provisioning of Persistent Local Volumes for Kubernetes using ZFS.
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OpenEBS on MicroK8S on Hetzner
Last few months I experimented more and more with all OpenEBS solutions that fit small Kubernetes cluster, using MicroK8S and Hetzner Cloud for a real experience.
- Openebs ?? Or equivalent
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Network Storage on On-Prem Barebones Machine
I would investigate https://openebs.io/ https://portworx.com/ https://longhorn.io/ if you are forced to you can mount ISCSI on the kublet and feed it to one of those solutions. Keep in mind most of the big guys buy some sort of managed solution that you can point a CSI like trident https://netapp-trident.readthedocs.io
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Ask HN: What are some fun projects to run on a home K8s cluster?
What are some cool projects to self hosted on a home Raspberry Pi (64 bit) Kubernetes cluster (Helm charts). arm64 support is a must. A lot of projects only build amd64 Docker containers which don't run on my cluster.
I currently run:
- obenebs (provides abstraction for using local k8s worker disks as PVC mounts when running on-prem) -- https://openebs.io/
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Finally got around to doing that Ceph on ZFS experiment
I didn't set anything actually -- I need to look into whether OpenEBS ZFS LocalPV can facilitate passing ZVOL options (I don't think it can just yet). The only tuning I did on the storage class was the usual ZFS-level options.
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My self-hosting infrastructure, fully automated
What do you use to provision Kubernetes persistent volumes on bare metal? I’m looking at open-ebs (https://openebs.io/).
Also, when you bump the image tag in a git commit for a given helm chart, how does that get deployed? Is it automatic, or do you manually run helm upgrade commands?
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Jinja2 not formatting my text correctly. Any advice?
ListItem( 'Kubernetes', 'https://kubernetes.io/', 'Container Engines and Orchestration', """Kubernetes is an open-source container-orchestration system for automating computer application deployment, scaling, and management.""" ), ListItem( 'Podman', 'https://podman.io/', 'Container Engines and Orchestration', """Podman is a daemonless, open source, Linux native tool designed to make it easy to find, run, build, share and deploy applications using Open Containers Initiative (OCI) Containers and Container Images.""" ), # Data Storage :: Block Storage ListItem( 'Amazon EBS', 'https://aws.amazon.com/ebs/', 'Data Storage :: Block Storage', """Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS) is an easy-to-use, scalable, high-performance block-storage service designed for Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2).""" ), ListItem( 'OpenEBS', 'https://openebs.io/', 'Data Storage :: Block Storage', """OpenESB is a Java-based open-source enterprise service bus. It allows you to integrate legacy systems, external and internal partners and new development in your Business Process.""" ), # Data Storage :: Cluster Storage ListItem( 'Ceph', 'https://ceph.io/en/', 'Data Storage :: Cluster Storage', """Ceph is an open-source software storage platform, implements object storage on a single distributed computer cluster, and provides 3-in-1 interfaces for object-, block- and file-level storage.""" ), ListItem( 'Hadoop Distributed File System', 'https://hadoop.apache.org/docs/r1.2.1/hdfs_design.html', 'Data Storage :: Cluster Storage', """The Hadoop Distributed File System ( HDFS ) is a distributed file system designed to run on commodity hardware.""" ), # Data Storage :: Object Storage ListItem( 'Amazon S3', 'https://aws.amazon.com/s3/', 'Data Storage :: Object Storage', """Amazon S3 or Amazon Simple Storage Service is a service offered by Amazon Web Services that provides scalable object storage through a web service interface.""" )
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Building a "complete" cluster locally
Ideas from my kubernetes experience: * Cert-Manager is very popular and almost a must-have if you terminate SSL inside the cluster * Backups using velero * A dashboard/UI is actually very helpful to quickly browse resources, client tools like k9s are fine too * Secret: Management: Bitnami Sealed Secrets is the second big project in that space * I would add Loki to aggregate Logs * Never heard of ory. Usually I see (dex)[https://dexidp.io/] or keycloak used for Authentication * I like to run OpenEBS as in-cluster storage. * Istio isn't compatible with the upcomming ServiceMeshInterface (i think), so the trend seem to go toward Linkerd * Some Operator to deploy your favorite Database, is also a nice learning exercise.
CouchDB
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System Design: Databases and DBMS
CouchDB
- Why SQLite is so great for the edge
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Creating an offline node.js app, but what can I use as a database?
CouchDB is a json based database for simple projects. The fork pouchdb offers lots of support for offline.
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How to run WebAssembly from your Rust Program
Apache CouchDB belongs to the family of NoSQL databases. It is a document store with a strong focus on replication and reliability. One of the most significant differences between CouchDB and a relational database (besides the absence of tables and schemas) is how you query data. Relational databases allow their users to execute arbitrary and dynamic queries via SQL. Each SQL query may look completely different than the previous one. These dynamic aspects are significant for use cases where you work exploratively with your dataset but don't matter as much in a web context. Additionally, defining an index for a specific table is optional. Most developers will define indices to boost performance, but the database does not require it.
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Erlang: The coding language that finance forgot
I just turns out you can't always do that in a real codebase. For example see here:
https://github.com/apache/couchdb/blob/23efd8e5b1aa96ef01640fec03a5fedc945ba8b9/src/couch_mrview/src/couch_mrview_http.erl#L228
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System Design: The complete course
Example: Apache Cassandra, CouchDB.
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Help need for Third Year Computer Science Project which is a dating website.
For non-SQL-based databases, consider MongoDB, or CouchDB, which are very easy to get started with.
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PDF Reviewer (3) - The Architecture
The Apache CouchDB server. It stores Annotation data.
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Database of Databases
CouchDB
- [AskJS] technology stack for PWA, ServiceWorker and offline first web app?
What are some alternatives?
longhorn - Cloud-Native distributed storage built on and for Kubernetes
Riak - Riak is a decentralized datastore from Basho Technologies.
democratic-csi - csi storage for container orchestration systems
LevelDB - LevelDB is a fast key-value storage library written at Google that provides an ordered mapping from string keys to string values.
lvm-localpv - Dynamically provision Stateful Persistent Node-Local Volumes & Filesystems for Kubernetes that is integrated with a backend LVM2 data storage stack.
RethinkDB - The open-source database for the realtime web.
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
Redis - Redis is an in-memory database that persists on disk. The data model is key-value, but many different kind of values are supported: Strings, Lists, Sets, Sorted Sets, Hashes, Streams, HyperLogLogs, Bitmaps.
Mayastor - Dynamically provision Stateful Persistent Replicated Cluster-wide Fabric Volumes & Filesystems for Kubernetes that is provisioned from an optimized NVME SPDK backend data storage stack.
Apache Cassandra - Mirror of Apache Cassandra
rook - Storage Orchestration for Kubernetes
Appwrite - Your backend, minus the hassle.